Meanwhile, economic growth has supported inflation and currency
swings in Australian cities - placing Sydney and Melbourne at the
third and fifth place in the top ten most costliest cities.

Editor of the report, Jon Copestake, said: "The cost of living in
Europe has seen relative declines, thanks to economic austerity and
currency fears. But Asian cities have also been rising on the back
of wage growth and economic optimism. This means that over half of
the 20 most expensive cities now hail from Asia and
Australasia."

However, Asia also remains host to six of the world's ten cheapest
cities - with Tehran clinching the top spot, followed by
Jeddah.

don't need to wait. just go to the polytechnic's students service centre ask them to issue a document to prove that you will be their student from April 2015 until 2018... then use that letter to re-defer.